Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Violence in Islamic Thought from the Mongols to European Imperialism [Pehme köide]

Edited by , Edited by
The violent conquest of the eastern part of the lands under Muslim rule by the Mongols marked a new period in the history of Islamic civilisation and in attitudes towards violence. This volume examines the various intellectual and cultural reactions of Muslim thinkers to these events, both within and without the territories subjected to Mongol control. Each chapter examines how violent acts were assessed by Muslim intellectuals, analysing both changes and continuity within Islamic thought over time.

Each chapter is structured around a case study in which violent acts are justified or condemned, revealing the variety of attitudes to violence in the medieval period. They are framed by a detailed introduction, focusing on theoretical perspectives on violence and religion and their application, or otherwise, to medieval Islam.

Examines the development of Muslim theological, legal, literary and cultural discussions about violence and its legitimation

The violent conquest of the eastern part of the lands under Muslim rule by the Mongols marked a new period in the history of Islamic civilisation and in attitudes towards violence. This volume examines the various intellectual and cultural reactions of Muslim thinkers to these events, both within and without the territories subjected to Mongol control. Each chapter examines how violent acts were assessed by Muslim intellectuals, analysing both changes and continuity within Islamic thought over time.

Each chapter is structured around a case study in which violent acts are justified or condemned, revealing the variety of attitudes to violence in the medieval period. They are framed by a detailed introduction, focusing on theoretical perspectives on violence and religion and their application, or otherwise, to medieval Islam.

Key Features

  • Examines the portrayal of violence in a variety of Muslim intellectual contexts (historical, philosophical, theological, legal, literary, artistic)
  • Employs a broad understanding of violence – from warfare between Muslims (and between Muslims and others) to individual acts of violence
  • Enables a better-informed debate about the nature of violence in Islamic thought, and how the positions developed in early Islam were both used and abandoned by later writers
  • Positions these classical conceptions of violence and its justification in Islamic thought in the broader methodological debate over violence and its relationship with religious thought

The violent conquest of the eastern part of the lands under Muslim rule by the Mongols marked a new period in the history of Islamic civilisation and in attitudes towards violence. This volume examines the various intellectual and cultural reactions of Muslim thinkers to these events, both within and without the territories subjected to Mongol control. Each chapter examines how violent acts were assessed by Muslim intellectuals, analysing both changes and continuity within Islamic thought over time.

Each chapter is structured around a case study in which violent acts are justified or condemned, revealing the variety of attitudes to violence in the medieval period. They are framed by a detailed introduction, focusing on theoretical perspectives on violence and religion and their application, or otherwise, to medieval Islam.



This book examines how violent acts were assessed by Muslim intellectuals, analysing both changes and continuity within Islamic thought over time.

Dates and Abbreviations vii
List of Figures
viii
1 Introduction
1(14)
Robert Gleave
Istvan T. Kristo-Nagy
PART I THE MONGOLS AND THEIR AFTERMATH
2 Violence And Non-Violence In The Mongol Conquest Of Baghdad (1258)
15(17)
Michal Biran
3 The Mongols As The Scourge Of God In The Islamic World
32(26)
Timothy May
4 Yasa And Shari'A. Islamic Attitudes Towards The Mongol Law In The Turco-Mongolian World (From The Golden Horde To Timur's Time)
58(21)
Istvan Vasary
5 Unacceptable Violence As Legitimation In Mongol And Timurid Iran
79(28)
Beatrice Forbes Manz
PART II VIOLENCE IN RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
6 Reconciling Ibn Taymiyya's Legitimisation Of Violence With His Vision Of Universal Salvation
107(10)
Jon Hoover
7 Moral Violence In Ahkam Ahl Al-Dhimma By Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya
117(8)
Marie Therese Urvoy
8 Al-Karaki, Jihad, The State And Legitimate Violence In Imami Jurisprudence
125(24)
Robert Gleave
PART III VIOLENCE IN PHILOSOPHICAL THOUGHT
9 Legitimate And Illegitimate Violence In Arabic Political Philosophy: Al-Farabi, Ibn Rushd And Ibn Khaldun
149(16)
Miklos Maroth
10 `Soft' And `Hard' Power In Islamic Political Advice Literature
165(28)
Vasileios Syros
PART IV REPRESENTING VIOLENCE
11 Old Images In New Skins: Flaying In The Iranian Visual Tradition
193(11)
Ivan Szanto
12 Warrant For Genocide? Ottoman Propaganda Against The Qizilbash
204(11)
Colin Imber
Bibliography 215(20)
Index 235